Symptoms of Dry Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD)

Learn about the early and advanced symptoms of dry AMD, and a simple home test for monitoring changes in your vision.

People often wonder what symptoms would be caused by dry AMD. The answer is that they’re subtle in the early stages of the disease. AMD is painless, so any pain in or around the eye would not be caused by AMD and would not be a sign of AMD progression.

People with early, dry AMD have small deposits under the retina called drusen. This is a German word that means “pebble.” If the drusen lift the retina enough, they can cause some small areas of visual distortion. The best way to see that is by looking at a piece of graph paper and noticing if any of the lines look wavy or interrupted.

There’s a special grid designed for this purpose called an “Amsler grid.” The grid should be viewed with reading glasses on, held at a comfortable reading distance, and one eye should be tested at a time while the other eye is closed or covered.

Also, the ForeseeHome Monitor® from Notal Vision® is the first FDA-cleared device for patients with dry AMD to monitor the disease at home. It is now a Medicare-covered service for patients enrolled in Medicare across the U.S., and who meet the eligibility criteria for dry AMD at high risk for converting to wet AMD.

Another symptom that may accompany early dry AMD is delayed dark adaptation. This can make it difficult to see for a few minutes when entering a dark room, like a move theatre.

Decreased contrast sensitivity can also occur with early AMD. This could be noticed if it’s difficult to read letters that are printed on a similar shade background. Diminished contrast sensitivity can be improved in some people by using yellow-tinted glasses.

People with late or advanced dry AMD have an area in the macula where the light-sensitive cells of the retina, the photoreceptors, have died. This condition is also called geographic atrophy. This causes a blind spot near the center of the visual field. People can learn to use the remaining photoreceptors by looking at the side of objects or words rather than at their center. The blind spot can enlarge slowly over the years to block the central vision, but very rarely affects the peripheral, or side vision. Much research is focused on preventing the blind spot enlargement, including several ongoing clinical trials.

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About the Author

Joshua Dunaief, MD, received his BA magna cum laude in Biology from Harvard (1987), MD/PhD from Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons (1996), completed ophthalmology residency at the Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins in 2000, and medical retina fellowship at Scheie Eye Institute, University of Pennsylvania in 2004.

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